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BAKU: Armitage Says US Has No Desire To Establish Base In Azerbaijan

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  • BAKU: Armitage Says US Has No Desire To Establish Base In Azerbaijan

    Baku Today, Azerbaijan
    March 28 2004

    US Diplomat Says His Country Has No Desire To Establish Base In
    Azerbaijan


    Richard Armitage, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State, said on Saturday
    that he had not discussed military bases with President Ilham Aliyev
    because his country has `no desire' to set up bases in Azerbaijan.

    Armitage, who arrived Baku late Friday on the last leg of his trip to
    Ukraine, Armenia and Azerbaijan, thanked Aliyev for his support in
    Iraq and Afghanistan.

    He said cooperation in so called U.S.-led war against terror and also
    Azerbaijan's support for the U.S. in Iraq and Afghanistan, where Baku
    has sent peacekeepers, was proof of a good military relationship
    between the United States and a Muslim country.

    The visit came amid continued planning for a global realignment of
    U.S. forces that could result in more U.S. military activity in
    former republics and satellites of the former Soviet Union.

    Armitage, who also met with opposition leaders, reiterated U.S.
    concerns about what the opposition calls a crackdown on dissent and
    independent media. But he did not play up the problems, saying that
    Aliev agrees that there must be independent media.

    He said that "the human rights situation is certainly not as good as
    it could or should be. But it's not a permanent situation and we have
    no doubt that it will change, change
    for the better."

    Armitage said that a settlement of the lingering conflict between
    Armenian and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be imposed
    from above by outside forces.

    "It has to be a lasting and durable solution, and it has to be
    something the two sides agree on," he said. He said an international
    mediating group that includes Russia and
    the United States "has some new ideas" on the issue, but did not
    reveal them.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly ethnic-Armenian populated western region
    of Azerbaijan, was occupied by Armenia in 1991-94 war. Armenian
    troops also took control over Azerbaijan's seven administrative
    districts - Lachin, Kelbejer, Aghdam, Fuzuli, Jebrail, Zengilan and
    Gubadli - surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh.

    As a result of the war, over 700,000 Azeris left their homes in the
    occupied territories. Azerbaijan was also subjected to a heavy burden
    of more 400,000-refugee population that fled Armenia.

    Around 400,000 ethnic-Armenians also had to move from their homes in
    Baku and Azerbaijan's other districts after Nagorno-Karabakh began
    demanding unification with Armenia in 1988.

    A cease-fire was signed between the two countries in 1994, but no
    agreement has been reached on the territory's final status yet.
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